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Jonathan Swinton -- New results and current questions in Fibonacci phyllotaxis [IN PERSON]

Patterned pufferfish scales demonstrating a Turing pattern in the natural world
Dates:28 October 2024
Times:14:00 - 15:00
What is it:Seminar
Organiser:Department of Mathematics
Who is it for:University staff, External researchers, Current University students
Speaker:Jonathan Swinton
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  • Mathematics in the life sciences
  • Department of Mathematics

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  • In category "Seminar"
  • In group "(Maths) Mathematics in the life sciences "
  • In group "(Maths) Maths seminar series"
  • By Department of Mathematics

Join us for this seminar by Jonathan Swinton as part of the North West Seminar Series in Mathematical Biology and Data Sciences. More details about the joint series can be found here https://northwestseminars.great-site.net/ .

The talk will be hosted in person in room 1.34 of the Simon Building. For those who cannot attend in person the talk will also be streamed via zoom, please contact carl.whitfield@manchester.ac.uk or igor.chernyavsky@manchester.ac.uk for the zoom link, or sign up to the mailing list.

Title: New results and current questions in Fibonacci phyllotaxis

For a century and more, mathematicians (notably including Alan Turing) have been explaining Fibonacci numbers within plant forms; for most of this time developmental and molecular biologists have ignored them for their own mostly valid reasons. Here I address one objection, the lack of testable predictions, by presenting the first quantitative evaluation of the ability of Schwendener disk-stacking models to generate the spiral patterns seen in a large dataset of sunflower seedheads.

Many of the numerical results can be understood through a renormalisation approach to the bifurcation theory of cylindrical lattices, which I will survey together with some open questions. The rich dynamics of these conceptually simple models are a fertile area for mathematical study, allow quantitative comparison with existing morphological data, can be related to and generate new hypotheses in molecular biology, and above all provide explanations of complex biological form that cannot be reduced to expression of a single gene. Phyllotaxis (still) has the potential to become a persuasive example of the need for mathematics in developmental biology.

This talk is based on the arXiv preprint 2407.05857 Disk-stacking models are consistent with Fibonacci and non-Fibonacci structure in sunflowers (arxiv.org) arxiv.org, and a PDF of the underlying textbook Mathematical Phyllotaxis is available in advance on request to jonathan@swintons.net

To subscribe to the mailing list for this event series, please send an e-mail with the phrase “subscribe math-lifesci-seminar” in the message body to listserv@listserv.manchester.ac.uk

Speaker

Jonathan Swinton

Role: Author

Organisation: Freelance

  • https://www.manturing.net/jonathan

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1.34
Simon Building
Manchester

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Carl Whitfield

carl.whitfield@manchester.ac.uk

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